Midlife Crisis: Definition, Symptoms, & Behavior
Midlife Crisis: Definition, Symptoms, & Behavior
We’ve all heard about people having midlife crises, but did you know it’s something psychologists study? Let’s see what the research says about midlife crises.
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When I was about 10 years old, my father appeared one day without a mustache. To me, this was a seismic event: I had never in my entire life seen him without that facial hair, and it changed so much about how he looked. As a child, I was of course wrapped up in how disorienting this change was for me. But as an adult, I wonder what inspired him, in his mid-40s, to alter his appearance in this way. Was his hair starting to gray? Were mustaches going out of style, and I just had no idea? Or was he maybe experiencing a bit of a midlife crisis? |
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What Is a Midlife Crisis? (A Definition)
Psychologists have a long history of trying to define and describe the different stages of a human life. It would be reassuring and helpful if each of us passed through a series of identifiable and describable periods in life, right? People who experience a midlife crisis are in the stage called middle adulthood, which is typically characterized by sustained engagement in key roles or experiences such as having a career, being married, and/or raising children (Freund & Ritter, 2009).
The transition from early to middle adulthood seems to occur for most people within a given time range and be clearly marked by milestones such as becoming a parent or buying a house (Levinson, 1978). A midlife crisis seems to consist of an intense and sudden reaction to the reality of one’s middle adulthood lifestyle (Freund & Ritter, 2009). The transition from early to middle adulthood can seem to occur almost seamlessly: There is a lot of momentum in many people’s lives as they go from moving in together to getting married to starting a family. But what comes after this? Potentially, just years of staying the course: working and/or raising children continuously for the next 20 or 30 years. And existing in this state indefinitely, as well as contemplating what it means to live in an aging body, seems to set the stage, for some people, for a midlife crisis.
One study found that nearly every American adult shared a pretty consistent definition of a midlife crisis, but also that their definition was a bit looser than the definitions researchers most commonly use (Wethington, 2000). People in general perceive a midlife crisis as being possible in one’s 30s and 50s as well as in one’s 40s, and, intriguingly, they often relate having a midlife crisis to facing some kind of destabilizing major life event, such as a divorce or a job loss.
How common is the midlife crisis, then? Interestingly, very little scientific research has tried to answer this question, but one of the few studies to try to do so in a systematic way found that about 10% of American men—women were not surveyed in this study—experience a midlife crisis (Brim, 1992).
Causes of a Midlife Crisis
This could be called a major shift in one’s time perspective (Nuttin, 1964). When we perceive the future as expansive and long, we set very different personal goals than we do when we see the future as more limited in length and scope. In fact, perceiving the future that way is pretty upsetting to many people; not only might they have a midlife crisis in response to this shift in time perspective, but they may also start changing their lives to manage the emotions that come with this perspective shift (Freund & Ritter, 2009).
One pair of researchers reviewed decades of early writing about the midlife crisis and concluded that, while many writers wanted to portray a midlife crisis as having a natural biological or psychiatric dimension, it may be more driven by social factors and contextual variables (Kearl & Hoag, 1984). These authors have a great point, given the low percentage of people experiencing a midlife crisis that we discussed earlier: If this was truly a biological phenomenon, it would probably happen to most people, right?
Instead, it seems more likely that we can find good explanations for a midlife crisis in the social pressures people face and the events that rearrange their lives. Maybe it’s an injury that makes it harder to play softball or soccer with peers, or the realization that the nest will be empty soon, or the early death of a parent, that radically shifts how you see yourself in the world.
Examples of Midlife Crises
The midlife crisis cliché might be that of a man who realizes he is aging and gets himself a flashy sports car to regain his sense of youthfulness. The typical midlife crisis involves some kind of precipitating event or internal realization, followed by emotional turmoil and probably some kinds of behavioral change. So imagine, for example, a middle-aged person who has watched their parent succumb to cancer in their early 60s. Thinking about how this parent spent their entire adult life working at the same job or raising children nonstop, the middle-aged person might be overcome with fear that they will face the same fate. Rather than continue along that same path, they quit their longtime job or take an extended vacation to get away from their parenting or professional responsibilities.
Typical Age for a Midlife Crisis
When are people most likely to experience a midlife crisis? Again, we don’t have a ton of solid data on something like this, but in an online survey, 71% of people said they themselves, or somebody they knew, had experienced a midlife crisis, and they reported the average for that crisis to be around 47 years old (Freund & Ritter, 2009). Most people in that study seemed to have their midlife crisis between the ages of 39 and 55.
Midlife Crisis for Women
Even though the stereotype of a midlife crisis at this moment in time might be a man desperately trying to recapture his youth, the idea of a midlife crisis has some origins in feminist thinking about women’s lives (Schmidt, 2018). These early writings noted that traditionally feminine roles of providing childcare and running a household become less pressing for women when their children leave the home, and this change in one’s maternal and domestic identity could potentially be the cause of a midlife crisis. While women can obviously have midlife crises related to other roles, such as their careers, these feminist writers made a very significant point about how parenting responsibilities and gender roles factor into predicting a midlife crisis.
Midlife Crisis for Men
Midlife Crisis Symptoms
Stages of a Midlife Crisis
Behaviors During a Midlife Crisis
Psychology of a Midlife Crisis
Midlife Crisis and Mental Breakdowns
For a very few people, a midlife crisis can look like a complete mental breakdown (Giuntella et al., 2023). For the rest, although psychiatric symptoms may occur, they do not reach the level of a complete mental breakdown. Oh, and by the way, a midlife crisis is not a psychiatric diagnosis like depression or schizophrenia.
How to Cope With a Midlife Crisis
Video: Navigating a Mid-Life Crisis
Articles Related to Midlife Crisis
Books Related to Midlife Crisis
Final Thoughts on Midlife Crisis
Most people will not experience a midlife crisis, but for those that do, both professional and personal support are available. Ultimately, a midlife crisis may help a person come to live a life more aligned with their values, once the crisis itself has passed.
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References
- Brim, O. G. (1992). Ambition: How we manage success and failure throughout our lives. Basic Books.
- Brim, O. G., Ryff, C. D., & Kessler, R. C. (Eds.). (2004). How healthy are we?: A national study of well-being at midlife. University of Chicago Press.
- Erikson, E. H. (1963). Childhood and society. Norton.
- Freund, A. M., & Ritter, J. O. (2009). Midlife crisis: A debate. Gerontology, 55(5), 582–591.
- Giuntella, O., McManus, S., Mujcic, R., Oswald, A. J., Powdthavee, N., & Tohamy, A. (2023). The midlife crisis. Economica, 90(357), 65–110.
- Jaques, E. (1965). Death and the midlife crisis. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 46(4), 502–514.
- Kearl, M. C., & Hoag, L. J. (1984). The social construction of the midlife crisis: A case study in the temporalities of identity. Sociological Inquiry, 54(3), 279–300.
- Kwon, M., & Oh, J. (2021). Mediating effects of family stress on the relationship between self-efficacy and midlife crisis in middle-aged men. Sustainability, 13(7), 3761.
- Lachman, M. E., & Bertrand, R. M. (2001). Personality and the self in midlife. In M. E. Lachman (Ed.), Handbook of midlife development (pp. 279–309). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
- Levinson, D. J. (1978). The seasons of a man’s life. Ballantine Books.
- Neugarten, B. L. (Ed.). (1968). Middle age and aging (Vol. 10). University of Chicago Press.
- Nuttin, J. R. (1964). The future time perspective in human motivation and learning. Acta Psychologica, 23, 60–82.
- Oles, P. K. (1999). Towards a psychological model of midlife crisis. Psychological Reports, 84(3_suppl), 1059–1069.
- Robinson, O. C., & Smith, J. A. (2009). Metaphors and metamorphoses: Narratives of identity during times of crisis. In Narrative, memory and identities (pp. 85–94). University of Huddersfield Press.
- Schmidt, S. (2018). The feminist origins of the midlife crisis. The Historical Journal, 61(2), 503–523.
- Tamir, L. M. (1989). Modern myths about men at midlife: An assessment. In S. Hunter & M. Sundel (Eds.), Midlife Myths: Issues, Findings, and Practice Implications. (pp. 157–179). Sage Publications.
- Wethington, E. (2000). Expecting stress: Americans and the “midlife crisis”. Motivation and Emotion, 24, 85–103.
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